Releasing LLMs into the mass market was a -mistake- on several fundamental levels.
First, the less obvious systemic one - without a continuing human-generated set of inputs to draw from, their ability to generate high quality desirable material more or less went away - not even because of model collapse, but because of -economic- collapse.
By pushing so aggressively to replace human writers, the LLM companies killed off their own food supply.
And now everything is cheap crap, and now you -can't- raise the price, and now you're stuck running very large expensive datacenters with zero resale value and your food supply to train the models on is gone and most of the people actually using your product are only doing so thru psychological manipulation - real fucking healthy way to keep a customer base, huh - or thru mandates from toxic management, so your remaining customer base is slowly burning out and becoming less functionally able -to- use your product.
Saw a fun thread the other day about lawyers complaining about chatgpt-enabled pro-se litigants.
So now one of your big professional orgs is associating your product with "annoying assholes who make a lot more very tedious work for us" - great job there.
Again, made it too cheap and too easily available. You put too low a value on human expertise, you fuckweasels.
@munin I think the neuralink is the fallback and it's a lot further along
@munin I think right now the goal is to effect changes in mood and thought patterns rather than allowing the recipients to access computers. At least the most sussy parts. This seems more geared for implanting into "butlers" or "workers" with empowerment being a veil for the advertisements
you know, shock collars are pretty cheap on aliexpress and you can find ones compatible with the openshock protocol really cheap; it's not that hard to do behavior modification if you have any idea how operant conditioning works.
@munin That's a really good point.
I'm hoping nothing works out however they want to entice their "butlers". 😎👉👉
@mauve
yeahhhh thing is, -training- people to use neural interfaces -effectively enough- takes longer than that.